Showing posts with label Mary Travers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary Travers. Show all posts

Friday, June 28, 2024

Various Artists - The Hitmakers Sing Barry Mann (1975)

Barry Imberman (aka Barry Mann) was born on 9 February 1939, and is best know for his song-writing partnership with his wife Cynthia Weil. His first successful song as a writer was 'She Say (Oom Dooby Doom)', a Top 20 chart-scoring song composed for the band The Diamonds in 1959, which was co-written with Mike Anthony. In 1961, Mann had his greatest success to that point with 'I Love How You Love Me', written with Larry Kolber, and scoring a number 5 hit for the band The Paris Sisters , and the same year Mann himself reached the Top 40 as a performer with a novelty song co-written with Gerry Goffin, 'Who Put The Bomp', which parodied the nonsense words of the then-popular doo-wop genre. Despite his success as a singer, Mann chose to channel his creativity into song-writing, forming a prolific partnership with Cynthia Weil, a lyricist he met while both were staff songwriters at Aldon Music, whose offices were located in Manhattan, near the composing-and-publishing factory the Brill Building. In the late 1960s, Mann and Weil left Aldon Music to head for Hollywood, where they continued to rack up the hits, working with Larry Kolber on Bobby Vinton's version of his earlier hit 'I Love How You Love Me' in 1968, and following up with Jay and the Americans' 'Walking in The Rain' in 1969, and B. J. Thomas's 'I Just Can't Help Believing' in 1970. Meanwhile, in addition to his role behind the scenes, Mann occasionally sought the limelight, and in 1971 he released his own album 'Lay It All Out', featuring himself as a singer, but it did not enjoy the success of his and Weil's works for others. As well as new songs it also included his own versions of some of his biggest hits, 'You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling', 'On Broadway', and 'Something Better'. Unsurprisingly, considering his standing as a songwriter, it wasn't long before all of the songs on the album had received cover versions, even those three afore-mentioned hits. Rather than use the original hit recordings of them, by The Righteous Brothers, The Drifters and Marianne Faithfull, I've chosen contemporary takes of the songs from around the same time as the album, although Bill Medley still gets to sing '...Lovin' Feeling', taken from his 1971 solo album 'A Song For You'. Three extra tracks from the following year round off this collection of songs from Mann's 1971 solo album.    



Track Listing

01 Too Many Mondays (Mary Travers 1973)
02 When You Get Right Down To It (Ronnie Dyson 1971)
03 I Heard You Singing Your Song (The Partridge Family 1973)
04 Holy Rolling (The New Seekers 1972) 
05 You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling (Bill Medley 1971)
06 On Broadway (Eric Carmen 1975)
07 Something Better (Harper's Bizarre 1969)
08 Sweet Ophelia (Wicked Lester 1971) 
09 Don't Give Up On Me (Suzanne 1973)
10 Ain't No Way To Go Home (The Grass Roots 1973)  
11 Rock And Roll Lullaby (B.J. Thomas 1972)
12 So Long Dixie (Blood, Sweat And Tears 1972)
13 The Last Blues Song (Helen Reddy 1972)

Friday, May 31, 2024

Various Artists - The Hitmakers Sing Paul Williams (1981)

Paul Hamilton Williams Jr. was born on 19 September 1940 in Omaha, Nebraska, and comes from a musical family, with his bother Mentor Williams also becoming a songwriter, composing Dobie Gray's 1973 hit 'Drift Away'. He began his professional song-writing career with Biff Rose in Los Angeles, who he met while the two of them were working together on a television comedy show. They wrote the song 'Fill Your Heart' (later covered by David Bowie) which was recorded by Rose on his first album, 'The Thorn In Mrs. Rose's Side' in 1968, and they later collaborated again on 'I'll Walk Away', which Rose recorded for his third eponymous album. Rose was instrumental in getting Williams his break with A&M Records, which resulted in him working with songwriter Roger Nichols, and together they were responsible for a number of successful pop hits from the 1970's, including several hits for Three Dog Night, with 'An Old Fashioned Love Song', 'The Family Of Man' and 'Out In The Country', as well as Helen Reddy with 'You And Me Against The World', and probably most notably for The Carpenters, giving them 'Rainy Days And Mondays', 'I Won't Last A Day Without You', and 'We've Only Just Begun'. An early collaboration with Nichols was on 'Someday Man', which was covered by the Monkees, for whom he unsuccessfully auditioned on a 1969 single, and he later worked on the music for a number of films, including writing and singing on 'Phantom Of The Paradise' in 1974, in which he starred and earned an Oscar nomination for the music, and also 'Bugsy Malone' in 1976. He also had a successful career as a recording artist, with his first album, 'Someday Man', appearing in 1970, followed by 'Just An Old Fashioned Love Song' being released the following year, and this featured his own versions of songs that had been already been hits for other artists. The album included one cover by him, of Graham Nash's 'Simple Man', so for this collection I've left that off and replaced it with a couple of his other songs from the same time period which were later recorded by Jack Jones and Art Garfunkel. 



Track listing

01 Waking Up Alone (David Soul 1981)
02 I Never Had It So Good (Dobie Gray 1973)
03 We've Only Just Begun (The Carpenters 1970)
04 That's Enough For Me (The Lettermen 1972) 
05 A Perfect Love (Gladys Knight And The Pips 1973)
06 An Old Fashioned Love Song (Three Dog Night 1971)
07 Let Me Be The One (Anne Murray 1971)
08 When I Was All Alone (Colin Blunstone 1974)
09 My Love And I (Mary Travers 1972)
10 Gone Forever (Sergio Mendes & Brasil '77 1971)
11 Talk It Over In The Morning (Jack Jones 1971)
12 Traveling Boy (Art Garfunkel 1973)

Friday, February 16, 2024

Various Artists - The Hitmakers Sing Jim Croce (2022)

James Joseph Croce was born on 10 January 1943 in South Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and grew up in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, right outside of Philadelphia. Graduating in 1960, he studied at Malvern Preparatory School for a year before enrolling at Villanova University, majoring in psychology and minoring in German, and discovering an interest in music when he became a leader of the campus singing group The Villanova Singers. Using a $500 wedding gift from Croce's parents, who set a condition that the money must be spent to make an album as they believed that he would give up music after the album failed, he released his first album, 'Facets', in 1966, with 500 copies being pressed. Despite his parents misgivings, the album proved to be a success, and every copy was sold. Croce married his girlfriend Ingrid Jacobson in 1966, and from the mid-1960's to the early 1970's, Croce and his wife performed as a duo, initially including songs by artists such as Ian & Sylvia, Gordon Lightfoot, Joan Baez, and Arlo Guthrie, but they eventually began writing their own music. In 1968, the Croces were encouraged by record producer Tommy West to move to New York City, and they recorded their first album, 'Jim & Ingrid Croce', for Capitol Records. Becoming disillusioned by the music business and New York City, they sold all but one guitar to pay their rent and returned to the Pennsylvania countryside, settling in an old farm in Lyndell. 
When Croce discovered that he and Ingrid were going to have a child, he became more determined to make music his profession, and so he sent a cassette of his new songs to a friend who was a producer in New York City in the hope that he could get a record deal. In 1972, Croce signed a three-record contract with ABC Records, releasing two albums, 'You Don't Mess Around With Jim' and 'Life And Times', with the singles of the title track and 'Time In A Bottle' from the first record receiving some airplay. He toured the United States, performing in large coffee houses and college campuses, but his financial situation remained precarious, as the record company had fronted him the money to record, and much of his earnings went to repay the advance. In 1973 he performed in London, Paris, Amsterdam, Zurich and Dublin, and in July the single 'Bad, Bad Leroy Brown' reached No. 1 on the American charts. This propelled his name into the public orbit, and  a few astute artists recorded covers of his early songs, in particular 'Time In A Bottle', which has become something of a classic song for him. Other tracks from 'Life And Times' continued to be picked up and covered over the next 40 years, and every one of them has now been tackled by a wide variety of artists, so here is a re-interpretation of Croce's second album of 1972, with two of his most famous tracks tagged on the end to flesh out a rather short album. 



Track listing

01 One Less Set Of Footsteps (Tom Swift 2011)  
02 Roller Derby Queen (Pat Surface 2022)  
03 Dreamin' Again (Marisa Malvino 2010) 
04 Careful Man (Jerry Reed 1980) 
05 Alabama Rain (Steiner Albrigtsen 2011)  
06 A Good Time Man Like Me Ain't Got No Business (Singin' The Blues) (Randy Howard 1976) 
07 Next Time, This Time (Mary Hopkin 2008) 
08 Bad, Bad Leroy Brown (Justin Tubb 1974)
09 These Dreams (Maggie's Guitar 2008)
10 Speedball Tucker (Nancy Sinatra 2008)
11 It Doesn't Have To Be That Way (Frank Chiafari 2012)
12 I'll Have To Say I Love You In A Song (Mary Travers 1974)
13 Time In A Bottle (Glen Campbell 1999)